Secondly Leni Riefenstahl demonstrate the uses of lighting techniques during Nuremberg Night Rally .By using lighting develop the atmosphere and mood during Hitler's amalgamation speech against the soldiers .“We want to be one people, and through you, to become this people. We want a society without class or rank, and you must not allow these ideas to grow within you. We want to see one Reich! And you must educate yourselves for this. We want this people to be obedient, and you must practice this obedience in yourselves. We want this people to be peace-loving, but at the same time courageous. And for that reason, you must be both peace-loving and strong. We want this people not to become soft, but to become hard, and therefore you
In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he shares his story of his experience through World War Two. Through his experiences, he experiences both internal and external conflicts. The conflicts he experienced include ideas of dehumanization, loss, and physical changes.
Language has the ability to impact the mood and tone of a piece in literature. In Night, Wiesel uses imagery, symbolism, diction and foreshadowing to illustrate dehumanization. The deeper true horror of the Holocaust is not what they Nazi’s did, but the behavior they legitimized as human beings being dehumanized by one another through silence and apathy.
Riefenstahl’s significance as a historical figure can be further seen as a powerful female pioneer. Riefenstahl excelled in a career dominated by men, which transcended Nazi Germany and impacted on an international level, questioning gender roles of the time. She was able to obtain the admiration of Hitler, who viewed her as a great artistic talent, at a time when society confined women to strict roles (Kinder, Kirsch and Kutch). Leni Riefenstahl was able to significantly impact history through challenging gender roles by becoming a female pioneer not only in her field but also in society as a whole by becoming one of the most prominent figures in a male-dominated society.
Based on the reading experience, what the author of the book, Elie Wiesel achieved with “Night” is having people understand the true horrors of the Holocaust. An evidence to prove that what Elie Wiesel achieved was achieved is the horrific events in the book and the reader’s general thoughts. By reading the book the reader followed Eliezer the protagonist on his survival out the camp alive, mentally witnessing and feeling the same horrors Eliezer had to face. Horrifying events such as child hangings on page 96 “...They hung the poor boy…”(Wiesel 96) and when Eliezer is finally free, it is not as if he ends on a happy note and is joyful but instead weary unable to tell if he is dead or not and filled with sorrow as Eliezer is constantly haunted
In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, it shows the things that Elie went through in the concentration camp. Elie uses dark imagery to show how physically miserable it was for them. Also, we are able to see his perspective on how they were treated to the point all they felt was pain, and mostly what he went through mentally and physically. In Night, the most crucial external conflict revolves around the Nazi party which is shown through the perspective of Elie Wiesel and his use of dark imagery. The way it impacted the life of Elie because the Nazi party caused him more personal problems like questioning if his father is worth being with, his relationship with God, if he should still live, and in the end the way he saw himself was different.
Holocaust survivor and author to the book “Night,” Elie Wiesel uses irony, metaphors and short syntax to show the readers the gloomy tone of how the Germans dehumanized the Jews and the torturing effect it had on them.
In the book “Night” written Elie Wiesel, Wiesel wants readers to know the pain and struggles he had to face in the holocaust. In 1944, in the village of Sighet, Transylvania, a boy named Elie was taken from his home and was taken to a concentration camp and spends time talking about being invaded by the Nazi. The purpose of the book was the remembrance of the holocaust and how it causes him to lose faith and his identity. Although the concentration camps were a bad place the people were forced to work, the rhetorical devices imagery, symbolism, and diction is used to present loss in faith and identity.
The Nazi regime killed approximately six million Jews during the time of the Holocaust; this was more than half of the Jewish population in Europe before the war began. Victims of the Holocaust faced extremely harsh conditions and treatments that would stay with those who survived forever. Elie Wiesel’s “Night” explains his personal experience of suffering to survive throughout the Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald. The author of the novel explains that inhumane and cruel treatments towards a group of people can lead them to give up all hope of survival through the use of tone, symbolism, and ellipses.
In the novel Night, Elie Wiesel gives an account about his life in a concentration camp. His focus is of course on his obstacles and challenges while in the camp, but his behavior is an example of how human beings respond to life in a concentration camp. The mood, personality, behavior, and obviously physical changes that occur are well documented in this novel. He also shows, as time wears on, how these changes become more profound and all the more appalling. As the reader follows Elie Wiesel’s story, from his home in the ghetto, to his internment at Auschwitz-Birkenau, to his transfer and eventual release at Buchenwald, one can see the impact of these changes first hand.
Elie Wiesel uses several types of figurative language in Night. In his novel, Elie’s use of symbolism is most important in helping the reader understand the horrors of his experience during the Holocaust.
As the film opened in Germany and around the world it became obvious that Riefenstahl had achieved overall success, beyond all expectations. In America, specifically New York it was called “flawless” and “a highly fascinating fantasy”. The Blue Light was even awarded a silver medal at the first Venice Biennale that year. Riefenstahl still saw herself primarily as an actress, but after her new found success, expected to continue filmmaking as a career. If The Blue Light had not influenced her career path she would not have reached her prominence with her films such as Triumph of the Will and Olympia to come. Riefenstahl did not only gain wider international fame, she also gained the admiration and support of Adolf Hitler. According to Audrey Salkeld, “Hitler was already an admirer of hers, having been won over by her first dance of fluttering veils in her first movie.......From then on, he had followed her career with interest, The Blue Light in particular catching his imagination.” Indeed the success of The Blue Light was one of the determining influences on Riefenstahl’s rise to prominence as she states, “This film was pivotal in my life, not so much because it was my first successful effort as a producer and director, but because Hitler was so fascinated by this film that he insisted I make a documentary about the Party rally in Nuremberg. The result was Triumph of
Night by Elie Wiesel focuses on giving the reader a precise understanding of the Holocaust from the perspective of a man who endured it. In order to vividly describe the situation, Wiesel uses specific words or phrases to signify the importance and value behind it. Wiesel writes, “Night. No one was praying for the night to pass quickly. The stars were but sparks of the immense conflagration that was consuming us. Were this conflagration to be extinguished one day, nothing would be left in the sky but extinct stars and unseeing eyes” (Wiesel 21). “Night” is used abundantly throughout the book. In today’s American society, night is for rejuvenation, peace,
In Night, cruelty is demonstrated because people are treated inhumanely and constantly exposed to death, so they lose the ability to act like a good person. They stole food from their family and people who they live with. The second one would be that when Elie Wiesel first arrives at Auschwitz the Jews ripped them out of the cattle cars and if they did not come out they would be shot on the spot. The Gestapo were cruel to save themselves.
In Night by Elie Wiesel, silence is a reoccurring theme that represents many aspects of Wiesel’s struggle during the most coldblooded massacre in the history of the world. Although silence may seem unimportant, Wiesel’s remarks about this theme symbolizes far more. He believes it is silence that allows the Nazis to takeover and begin the slaughtering. Wiesel emphasizes that silence is the only appropriate response to the Holocaust because the events that took place at Auschwitz have caused language and words to seemingly have lost their meaning; the words people use to describe what happened cannot even compare to the reality of the event. Language no longer has any power to express the truth of what happened to the Jewish people during this inhumane mass execution. Wiesel uses silence to intensify dramatic effect, to suggest the indescribable, and to symbolize the loss of faith.
The Holocaust changed the lives of many. Those that survived have many terrifying stories to tell. Many survivors are too horrified to tell their story because their experiences are too shocking to express in words. Eli Wiesel overcomes this fear by publicly relaying his survival of the Holocaust. "Night", his powerful and moving story, touches the hearts of many and teaches his readers a great lesson. He teaches that in a short span of time, the ways of the world can change for the worst. He wants to make sure that if the world didn't learn anything from hearing about the atrocities of the Holocaust, maybe they'll be able to learn something from Elie's own personal experience. Usually, a person can internalize a situation better